KVM implements the PSCI (Power State Coordination Interface) specification in order to provide services such as CPU on/off, reset and power-off to the guest. The PSCI specification is regularly updated to provide new features, and KVM implements these updates if they make sense from a virtualization point of view. This means that a guest booted on two different versions of KVM can observe two different "firmware" revisions. This could cause issues if a given guest is tied to a particular PSCI revision (unlikely), or if a migration causes a different PSCI version to be exposed out of the blue to an unsuspecting guest. In order to remedy this situation, KVM exposes a set of "firmware pseudo-registers" that can be manipulated using the GET/SET_ONE_REG interface. These registers can be saved/restored by userspace, and set to a convenient value if required. The following register is defined: * KVM_REG_ARM_PSCI_VERSION: - Only valid if the vcpu has the KVM_ARM_VCPU_PSCI_0_2 feature set (and thus has already been initialized) - Returns the current PSCI version on GET_ONE_REG (defaulting to the highest PSCI version implemented by KVM and compatible with v0.2) - Allows any PSCI version implemented by KVM and compatible with v0.2 to be set with SET_ONE_REG - Affects the whole VM (even if the register view is per-vcpu)